Homeowners who refinance continue to overwhelmingly opt for fixed-rate mortgages, and by historical standards, fewer homeowners are using refinances as a means of putting more cash in their pockets, according to Freddie Mac’s 2013 Second Quarter Refinance Report.
More
than 95 percent of homeowners who refinanced their mortgage loans in the second
quarter of this year chose fixed-rate loans.
Fixed-rate
loans were favored both among those who previously held fixed-rate loans and
among those whose mortgages were adjustable-rate mortgages (ARMs), according to
Freddie Mac.
The
GSE found that among refinances in the second quarter, 79 percent of homeowners
with ARMs switched to fixed-rate loans. On the other hand, just 2 percent of
homeowners with fixed-rate loans opted for an ARM in their refinance.
At
the same time, “[t]he cash-out amount, while increasing, continues to remain
low by historical standards,” according to Frank Nothaft, VP and chief
economist at Freddie Mac. The total cash-out volume for the second quarter was
$9.5 billion, down from a peak of $84 billion in the second quarter of 2006.
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